Timeline of natural satellites


   

Business Management Training online
, or Back to: Webster Dictionary with PRONUNCIATION and Sound! , where you can learn English and educate yourself
Practice English, talk to a funny artificial intelligence robot -- hear its voice (hilarious).

Timeline of discovery of Solar System planets and their moons

  (Redirected from Timeline of natural satellites)
Jump to: navigation, search
Objects in the Solar System
by orbit
by size
by discovery date
By categories:
equilibrium objects
moons
minor planets


This timeline of discovery of Solar System planets and their natural satellites charts the progress of the discovery of new bodies over history.

Historically the naming of natural satellites did not always match the times of their discovery.

In the following tables, planetary satellites are indicated in bold type (e.g. Moon) while planets, major or minor, which directly circle the Sun are in italic type (e.g. Earth). The tables are sorted by publication/announcement date. Dates are annotated with the following symbols:

  • i: for date of first imaging (photography, etc.);
  • o: for date of first human visual observation, either through telescope or on photographic plate (the true discovery moment);
  • p: for date of announcement or publication.

*Note: Marked moons had complicated discoveries. Several moons took several years to be confirmed, and in several cases were actually lost and rediscovered. Others were found in Voyager photographs years after they were taken.

Contents

Color legend

The planets and their natural satellites are marked in the following colors:

Planets

     Mercury      Venus      Earth and satellite      Mars and satellites      Jupiter and satellites      Saturn and satellites      Uranus and satellites      Neptune and satellites

Dwarf planets and candidates

     Ceres      Pluto and satellites      Sedna (detached object)      Haumea and satellites      Makemake      Eris and satellite

[ Prehistory

Prehistory
Name Image Planet/Number Designation References/Notes
Sun
Star In Ptolemy's geocentric model, the Earth was believed to be at the center of the cosmos. Seven planets were placed in orbit around it in an order of increasing distance from the Earth, as established by the Greek Stoics: the Moon, Mercury, Venus, the Sun, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn. This list included two objects, the Sun and the Moon, which are no longer considered to be planets; it also excluded the Earth.
Mercury
1st Planet In Nicolaus Copernicus' heliocentric system (De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium, 1543) the Earth came to be considered a planet revolving with the other planets around the Sun, in the following order of distance from the Sun: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn. The Sun, now situated near the center of revolution, was no longer considered a planet.
Venus
2nd Planet
Earth
3rd Planet
Mars
4th Planet
Jupiter
5th Planet
Saturn
6th Planet
Moon
Earth I In the Copernican system, the Moon was considered to be no longer a planet but a natural satellite of the Earth, and was the only body in that system whose revolution was not centered on the Sun.

[ 17th century

17th century
Date Name Image Planet/Number Designation References/Notes
1610s
o: January 7, 1610
p: March 13, 1610
Callisto
Jupiter IV Galileo.[1] The Galilean moons. Note: One of the moons may have been recorded by the Chinese astronomer Gan De in 364 BC. The Galilean satellites were the first celestial objects that were confirmed to orbit an object other than the Earth.
Io
Jupiter I
Europa
Jupiter II
o: January 11, 1610
p: March 13, 1610
Ganymede
Jupiter III
1650s
o: March 25, 1655
p: March 5, 1656
Titan
Saturn VI
Saturn II (1673–1684), Saturn IV (1686–1789)
Huygens.[2] He first "published" his discovery as an anagram, sent out on June 13, 1655; later published in pamphlet form as De Saturni luna Observatio Nova and in full in Systema Saturnium (July 1659).
1670s
o: October 25, 1671
p: 1673
Iapetus
Saturn VIII
Saturn III (1673–1684), Saturn V (1686–1789), Saturn VII (1789–1848)
Cassini[3]
o: December 23, 1672
p: 1673
Rhea
Saturn V
Saturn I (1673–1684), Saturn III (1686–1789)
1680s
o: March 21, 1684
p: April 22, 1686
Tethys
Saturn III
Saturn I (1686–1789)
Cassini.[4] Together with his previous two discoveries, Cassini named these satellites Sidera Lodoicea.

In his work Kosmotheôros (published posthumously in 1698), Christiaan Huygens relates "Jupiter you see has his four, and Saturn his five Moons about him, all plac’d in their Orbits."

Dione
Saturn IV
Saturn II (1686–1789)
Date Name Image Planet/Number Designation References/Notes

[ 18th century

18th century
Date Name Image Planet/Number Designation References/Notes
1780s
o: March 13, 1781
p: April 26, 1781
Uranus
7th Planet Herschel first reported the discovery of Uranus on April 26, 1781, initially believing it a comet[5]
o: January 11, 1787
p: February 15, 1787
Titania
Uranus III Herschel.[6][7] He later reported four more spurious satellites.[8]
Oberon
Uranus IV
o: August 28, 1789[9]
p: November 12, 1789
Enceladus
Saturn II Herschel[10]
o: September 17, 1789
p: November 12, 1789
Mimas
Saturn I
Date Name Image Planet/Number Designation References/Notes

[ 19th century

19th century
Date Name Image Planet/Number Designation References/Notes
1800s
o: January 1, 1801
p: January 24, 1801
Ceres
8th Planet (1801)
Asteroid (1851)
Dwarf planet (2006)
Giuseppe Piazzi. He first announced his discovery on January 24, 1801, in letters to fellow astronomers. The first formal publication was the September 1801 issue of thee Monatliche Correspondenz.
1840s
o: September 23, 1846
p: November 13, 1846
Neptune
13th Planet (1846)
8th Planet (1851)
Galle and Le Verrier[11][12]
o: October 10, 1846
p: November 13, 1846
Triton
Neptune I Lassell[13]
o: September 16, 1848
p: October, 1848
Hyperion
Saturn VII Bond, Bond,[14] Lassell[15]
1850s
o: October 24, 1851 Ariel
Uranus I Lassell[16]
Umbriel
Uranus II
1870s
o: August 12, 1877 Deimos
Mars II Hall[17][18][19]
o: August 18, 1877 Phobos
Mars I
1890s
o: September 9, 1892
p: October 4, 1892
Amalthea
Jupiter V Barnard[20]
i: August 16, 1898
o: March 17, 1899
Phoebe
Saturn IX Pickering[21][22]
Date Name Image Planet/Number Designation References/Notes

[ Early 20th century

Early 20th century
Date Name Image Planet/Number Designation References/Notes
1900s
i: December 3, 1904
p: January 6, 1905
Himalia (Hestia 1955–1975)
Jupiter VI Perrine[23][24][25][26][27]
i: January 2, 1905
p: February 27, 1905
Elara (Hera 1955–1975) Jupiter VII Perrine[28][29][27]
i: January 27, 1908
o: February 28, 1908
p: March 1–6, 1908
Pasiphaë (Poseidon 1955–1975) Jupiter VIII Melotte[30][31]
1910s
i: July 21, 1914
p: September 17, 1914
Sinope (Hades 1955–1975) Jupiter IX Nicholson[32]
1930s
i: January 23, 1930
o: February 18, 1930
p: March 13, 1930
Pluto
9th Planet (1930)
Dwarf planet (2006)
Tombaugh[33]
i: July 6, 1938
p: August 1938
Lysithea (Demeter 1955–1975) Jupiter X Nicholson[34]
i: July 30, 1938
p: August 1938
Carme (Pan 1955–1975) Jupiter XI Nicholson[34]
1940s
i: February 16, 1948
p: June 1949
Miranda
Uranus V Kuiper[35]
i: May 1, 1949
p: August 1949
Nereid
Neptune II Kuiper[36][37]
1950s
i: September 28, 1951
p: December 1951
Ananke (Adrastea 1955–1975) Jupiter XII Nicholson[38]
Date Name Image Planet/Number Designation References/Notes

[ Late 20th century

Later 20th century
Date Name Designation Image Planet/Number Designation References/Notes
1960s
i: December 15, 1966
p: January 3, 1967
Janus* S/1966 S 2
Saturn X Dollfus[39][40][41][42][43][44]
(Dollfus may have seen either Janus or Epimetheus)
i: December 18, 1966
p: January 6, 1967
Epimetheus* S/1980 S 3 Saturn XI Walker[45]
1970s
i: September 11, 1974
p: September 20, 1974
Leda Jupiter XIII Kowal[46][47][48][49]
i: September 30, 1975
p: October 3, 1975
Themisto* S/1975 J 1 Jupiter XVIII Kowal[50][51][52]
(Discovered and then lost)
i: April 13, 1978
o: June 22, 1978
Charon S/1978 P 1
Pluto I Christy[53][54]
i: July 8, 1979
p: November 23, 1979
Adrastea S/1979 J 1
Jupiter XV Jewitt, Danielson / Voyager 2[55][42][56][57][58][59]
1980s
Date Name Designation Image Planet/Number Designation References/Notes
i: February 26, 1980
p: March 6, 1980
Epimetheus* S/1980 S 3
Saturn XI [60][61][62][44][63]
(Confirmed by Voyager 1)
i: March 1, 1980
p: March 6, 1980
Helene S/1980 S 6
Saturn XII Laques, Lecacheux[60][61][62][63]
i: April 8, 1980
p: April 10, 1980
Telesto S/1980 S 13
Saturn XIII Smith, Reitsema, Larson, Fountain, Voyager 1[64][63]
i: March 5, 1979
p: April 28, 1980
Thebe S/1979 J 2
Jupiter XIV Synnott, Voyager 1[56][57]
i: February 19, 1980
p: June 6, 1980
Janus* S/1980 S 1
Saturn X [42][61][62][44][63]
(Confirmed by Voyager 1)
i: March 13, 1980
p: July 31, 1980
Calypso S/1980 S 25
Saturn XIV Pascu, Seidelmann, Baum, Currie[62][63]
i:March 4, 1979
p: August 26, 1980
Metis S/1979 J 3
Jupiter XVI Synnott, Voyager 1[57]
o: October, 1980
p: October 31, 1980
Prometheus S/1980 S 27
Saturn XVI Collins, Voyager 1[65]
Pandora S/1980 S 26
Saturn XVII Collins, Voyager 1[65]
o: October, 1980
p: November 13, 1980
Atlas S/1980 S 28
Saturn XV Terrile, Voyager 1[66]
i: May 24, 1981
p: May 29, 1981
Larissa* S/1981 N 1
= S/1989 N 2
Source: this wikipedia article, under GFDL.
This site was used times.